Sibelius: Karelia, Tapiola, Les Oceanides, Valse Triste, etc. / Davis, London SO
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Sir Colin Davis's outstanding series of Sibelius's symphonies for RCA continues with a program of the Finnish master's tone poems, which include some of his finest music. The late Tapiola, for example, is a brooding meditation on the mysteries of Scandinavia's vast forestlands, replete with harmonic ingenuity and imaginative orchestral colors. The early Karelia Suite charms, the familiar Finlandia bristles with patriotic fervor, and Davis makes the seductive Valse Triste sing its sad song with poignant restraint. Throughout the varied program, he captures the often chilly mysteries at the core of Sibelius's music. A very desirable release, made even more fetching by Tony Faulkner's lifelike engineering. --Dan Davis
Sibelius: Karelia, Tapiola, Les Oceanides, Valse Triste, etc. / Davis, London SO, Music, Jean Sibelius, Jean Sibelius, London Symphony Orchestra, Colin Davis, 20th/21st Century Tone Poem/Symphonic Poem, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Orchestral, Orchestral & Symphonic, Romantic Tone Poem/Symphonic Poem for Orchestra, Suite for Orchestra
Average customer rating:
- Finland's favorite son
- Very Enjoyable
- Excellent recording
- Karelia -- where's the snap?
- Sensitive,beautifully played & recorded performances
|
Sibelius: Karelia, Tapiola, Les Oceanides, Valse Triste, etc. / Davis, London SO
Colin Davis
Manufacturer: RCA
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Sibelius
| Sibelius, Jean
| ( S )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Suites
| Forms & Genres
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Tone Poems
| Theatrical, Incidental & Program Music
| Forms & Genres
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Symphonies
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Classical Music
| The Sony BMG Masterworks Store
| Amazon.com Label Stores
| Stores
| Music
Similar Items:
- Sibelius: Symphonies Nos. 5 & 6
ASIN: B00000IFOG
Release Date: 1999-04-13 |
Tracks:
- Karelia Suite, Op. 11: Intermezzo
- Karelia Suite, Op. 11: Ballade
- Karelia Suite, Op. 11: Alla marcia
- The Ocanides, Op. 73
- Finlandia, Op. 26
- Valse Triste
- Tapiola, Op. 112
- Nightride & Sunrise, Op. 55
Amazon.com
Sir Colin Davis's outstanding series of Sibelius's symphonies for RCA continues with a program of the Finnish master's tone poems, which include some of his finest music. The late Tapiola, for example, is a brooding meditation on the mysteries of Scandinavia's vast forestlands, replete with harmonic ingenuity and imaginative orchestral colors. The early Karelia Suite charms, the familiar Finlandia bristles with patriotic fervor, and Davis makes the seductive Valse Triste sing its sad song with poignant restraint. Throughout the varied program, he captures the often chilly mysteries at the core of Sibelius's music. A very desirable release, made even more fetching by Tony Faulkner's lifelike engineering. --Dan Davis
Customer Reviews:
Finland's favorite son.......2006-04-05
Jean Sibelius, the favorite son of Finland, often wrote programmatic music using mythology, political themes, and scenic imagery of his homeland. This disk offers six such works spanning his entire career: Karalia Suite, The Oceanides, Finlandia, Valse Triste, Tapiola, and Nightride and Sunrise.
The 15-minute Karelia Suite is taken from a larger 50-minute work, a composition from Sibelius' youth. Karelia is the wide border between Finland and Russia, the center of the epic Finnish tale Kalevala, which Sibelius wrote an early choral symphony on. The three movements show youthful simplicity and classical tendencies: Intermezzo, a gentle march with distant horn calls, Ballade, a melancholy chorale with many textures, and March, a joyful and optimistic march, both gentile and nave. The Oceanides recall the sea-nymphs from the Kalevala myth, although this is also believed to have some root in Homeric mythology. At 11 minutes, light oscillating strings, a flute duet, 2 timpani, and 2 harps, slow harmonic rhythms, and the shimmering, Impressionistic qualities give the work a gentle feel. The most famous work, Finlandia, speaks of the repression of the Russian hold over Finland, but the hope of independence soon follows (which Finland got in 1917) with the famous chorale. Angry and dissonant brass and timpani open the work, surrounded by a menacing string melody. A rhythmic section is taken up, first gloomily, but a triumphant march, a peaceful chorale, and an exultant finale, conclude the Nationalistic work.
Valse Triste, 6 minutes, is a work meant to accompany a Finnish play entitled "Death"; dreaming of dancers and dancing, an old woman hears a knock...Death. This is a sad, slow waltz with long, languorous lines. The work becomes more and more up beat in tempo as time passes, nearly impassioned; but the work ends intimately, as the story suggests. Tapiola, a character from Kalevala, is the god of the forests. Described as "ancient, mysterious, brooding", loneliness...the 18 minute poem musically depicts just that. A mighty, heroic opening, almost fearful, dissonant and chromatic leads to a fantastical dance of the wood nymphs. An aggressive battle of magic progresses, with blazing brass, but all ends calmly in strings. Nightride and Sunrise tells of a man's night journey through a gloomy forest, a forest with strange sounds and foreboding, but eventually dawn appears, and the gloom is dispelled. The piece is infested with galloping strings, coming across various interruptions (counterpoint, polyrhythms, a long woodwind solo) that are somewhat scary. Visually, this is the most vivid, visually descriptive, and dramatic of the works.
Sir Colin Davis and the London Symphony Orchestra have received some flack for their series of Sibelius works on RCA Red Label. Suffice to say, this one works better than others. The interpretations are good, the tempo choices are intelligent, and the programming of the CD, offers a nice variety of music. The playing seems as if the ensemble was having an off day: odd wind timbres at times, brass tuning and balance are shifty in places, but the RCA recording features odd balances, favoring strings and brass. However, there are some great moments on this CD, and despite those recording issues, is a good CD. 77 minutes of neat, programmatic Sibelius music, dramatic and personal, especially his devotion to Finland, is genuinely portrayed here. Compare with his older recordings with the BSO.
Very Enjoyable.......2004-07-16
Davis has acquired a considerable reputation in recent years as a conductor of Sibelius works. This is a very nice recording of some of Sibelius' shorter orchestral works. The performances feature the lush romanticism of Sibelius work but without exaggerating the tempi or balance of the orchestra. Others may prefer more dramatic renditions but these are fine performances of enjoyable works. A nice feature is that the disc includes both very well known and less frequently performed pieces.
Excellent recording.......2002-09-03
This disc features an eclectic group of works: on one hand, three well-known, instantly likeable compositions which serve as a nice introduction to the music of Jean Sibelius (Karelia suite, Finlandia, Valse triste); on the other, three elaborate and multi-layered pieces that, although not too hard to appreciate at first, reveal most of their secrets after several listens (Oceanides, Tapiola, Nightride and Sunrise). Davis obtains beautiful sonic textures from the LSO: this is one of those discs that beg to be listened to with headphones. The recording ends with the musical adventure that is Nightride and Sunrise - a piece which, even if you've listened to it many times, remains unpredictable. From the first minute to the last, this is an excellent disc.
Karelia -- where's the snap?.......2000-05-02
I just bought the old Davis/BSO Sibelius symphonies, based on reputation. I should have listened to them first. The performances feel lifeless, and I feel the same way about his Karelia on this recording. Do yourself a favor -- get Sir Charles MacKerras' recording of the 2nd Symphony + Karelia + Finlandia, and listen just to the Intermezzo from Karelia and compare it to this, and you will understand what I am talking about. And if you want to compare Davis to someone who takes the Intermezzo at something like his tempo, try the old Barbirolli recording with the Halle Orchestra. Even though Barbirolli is little, if any, faster, there's life in his music-making that is totally absent in Davis' version.
Sensitive,beautifully played & recorded performances.......1999-11-22
Finlandia lasts one minute more than Davis' 1976 Boston performance-remarkable in an eight minute work! It blazes less than before, but is incredibly heartfelt and very powerful. So the rest of the collection goes; Night Ride is pretty calm but seems more logical and essentially "Sibelian" than most other performances. The sound is both clear and full. Rather than sounding efficiently generic, the LSO produces crystalline textures and broadly powerful climaxes.
Music Review:
- Six Sonatas for Solo Violin op. 27
- Sound Map of the Hudson River
- Sundays in Ordinary Time
- The Barber of Seville / B. Ford, D. Jones, A. Opie; G. Bellini [in English]
- The Singing Bowls of Tibet
- The Tallis Christmas Mass
- Two Pastels, Andante for Strings, Concerto for English Horn
- Verdi: Luisa Miller [Import]
- Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra: Mahler & Walter
- Wagner: Die Meistersinger Von Nürnberg
Music Review
music review
Music Review
Battles Ole
Glazunov: Concerto for violin in Am; Kabalevsky: Concerto for violin in C
Clementi: Sonata, Op.40/Bach-Busoni: Chaconne In D Minor/Schubert: Drei Klavierstücke, DV.946/Beethoven: Sonata, Op.5
Anthem
Don't Try It [CD-single]
Gentle Yoga with Jenny Garrison
Franco Battiato [Import]
I, Lucifer [Enhanced]
Fallout From the Phil Zone [Live]
Chausson, D'Indy: String Quartets
Get It on [Import]
Da' Cream Reggaeton Collection
Colombia Te Canta
Legendary Jams 1976-1980
Eternal Nightmare